0
Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Noun vs possessive verb

I'm using this sentence in a promotional piece and we're debating the apostrophy at the end of the word competitions.

I say no, someone else says yes. The sentence reads: (EZtote is a product name)

The average Hoover EZtote is a minimum five pounds heavier than the competitions’.



Would like your opinion.

  

Top answer

Hi, I'm using this sentence in a promotional piece and we're debating the apostrophy at the end of the word competitions. I say no, someone else says yes. The sentence reads: (EZtote is a product name) The average Hoover EZtote is a minimum five pounds heavier than the competitions’.

  • Hi, I'm using this sentence in a promotional piece and we're debating the apostrophy at the end of the word competitions.
  • I say no, someone else says yes.
  • The sentence reads: (EZtote is a product name) The average Hoover EZtote is a minimum five pounds heavier than the competitions’.
  • Would like your opinion.
  • The average Hoover EZtote is a minimum five pounds heavier than the competition 's .
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
Hi,
I'm using this sentence in a promotional piece and we're debating the apostrophy at the end of the word competitions.

I say no, someone else says yes. The sentence reads: (EZtote is a product name)

The average Hoover EZtote is a minimum five pounds heavier than the competitions’.

Would like your opinion.

0
Thanks for your prompt response, Clive.

Related Questions